What Happens to Wildlife After Nuclear Disaster

  Рет қаралды 375,281

Real Science

Real Science

Ай бұрын

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Writer/Narrator: Stephanie Sammann
Writer: Lorraine Boissoneault
Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.net/dylanhennessy1)
Illustrator/Animator: Kirtan Patel (kpatart.com/illustrations)
Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraphics.com/)
Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net)
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster ( / forgottentowel )
Producer: Brian McManus (watchnebula.com/realengineering)
REFERENCES
[1] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_...
[2] web.archive.org/web/201709121...
[3] www.osti.gov/opennet/servlets...
[4] stacks.stanford.edu/file/drui...
[5] www.osti.gov/opennet/servlets...
[6] www.commonsnews.org/issue/113...
[7] web.archive.org/web/201310291...
[8] royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
[9] inis.iaea.org/collection/NCLC...
[10] academic.oup.com/jhered/artic...
[11] royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
[12] onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/f...
[13] www.worldwildlife.org/stories...
[14] pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25852....
[15] sci-hub.ee/10.1016/j.envint.2...
[16] www.sciencedirect.com/science...
[17] aacrjournals.org/cancerres/ar...

Пікірлер: 724
@user-yn4xc8kt3i
@user-yn4xc8kt3i 18 күн бұрын
My dad was hired to run a bioremediation effort on Johnston atole in the early 2000s. Him and his crew realized the radiation contamination was higher than officially recognized. He died of agressively spreading brain tumors within a year of staying on the atole. He was 39. It was later discovered that the US govt knew the radiation levels were dangerous, but covered it up. RIP dad.
@MistaGSpecialEducation
@MistaGSpecialEducation 13 күн бұрын
this is why you should literally never trust the government, you never know what they don’t show you
@ChappyMonster
@ChappyMonster 13 күн бұрын
aw man, im really sorry for your loss
@trinomial-nomenclature
@trinomial-nomenclature 13 күн бұрын
It's awful how people study hard and become so skilled in their field that they're asked to run something of this scale, a highly educated and dedicated person and to have this amazing opportunity to help the oceans. Only for the government to lie/omit crucial information that could kill you in a horrific manner because now, now, we can't have the government look bad 😒. I am so sorry for your loss, such a preventable loss for such a brilliant man.
@Thugshaker_thequaker
@Thugshaker_thequaker 13 күн бұрын
I am so sorry for your loss, that is awful.
@sgh2146
@sgh2146 13 күн бұрын
i understand not publicly recognizing that the radiation levels were so high but not even internally for the people cleaning up??? they essentialy sent that crew to death it is infuriating
@EmuEmuchu
@EmuEmuchu Ай бұрын
SpongeBob transformed from a sea sponge to cleaning sponge
@dominantasmr578
@dominantasmr578 Ай бұрын
I like what you did there
@mr.badtouch1482
@mr.badtouch1482 Ай бұрын
Actually he transformed from a profilatic sponge to a sea sponge to a cleaning spong
@piyushsahurkar9362
@piyushsahurkar9362 Ай бұрын
Godzilla transformed from an iguana to an atomic monster
@nathanlevesque7812
@nathanlevesque7812 Ай бұрын
@@mr.badtouch1482 =_=
@dammdaniel9953
@dammdaniel9953 Ай бұрын
Monkey transform into 🙎🏿‍♂️
@jasepoag8930
@jasepoag8930 Ай бұрын
Funny that we in the reef aquarium hobby often struggle to grow coral, but it was growing well in a nuclear wasteland.
@szbnahl
@szbnahl Ай бұрын
Clearly you need to add more plutonium to the tank.
@hersonissoswolf3699
@hersonissoswolf3699 Ай бұрын
it's wastesea, not wasteland
@infinitemonkey917
@infinitemonkey917 Ай бұрын
One species is thriving. Many others died off.
@jasepoag8930
@jasepoag8930 Ай бұрын
@@szbnahl some people do dose strontium. Pretty much the same, right?
@leandersearle5094
@leandersearle5094 Ай бұрын
Ouch.
@catfission
@catfission Ай бұрын
A lot of people mistakenly assume that dogs in the Chernobyl exclusion zone suffer from mutations because of teratogenesis from radiation exposure. The real cause of deformities in that population is severe inbreeding. Those little guys have an *exceptionally* shallow gene pool 😅.
@TJ-vh2ps
@TJ-vh2ps Ай бұрын
The wolves that received more radiation may have less cancer because of survivorship bias. Perhaps in the high-radiation group, the wolves that were more susceptible to radiation died, while the ones that survived were more resistant to radiation. In the lower-dose wolves, the ones more susceptible to radiation may have survived, but developed cancer. Just speculating wildly, Joan Calamezzo style!
@abyssstrider2547
@abyssstrider2547 12 күн бұрын
Yeah that's how natural selection works. And why marine animals have special genetic sequences that allow them to have superior regeneration.
@eaar
@eaar 12 күн бұрын
You might be right, but wed have to see the sampling methods. Whether or not or how well they sampled the populations before the disaster would be a big factor to that
@xavier4519
@xavier4519 11 күн бұрын
​@@abyssstrider2547i don't see how it's natural selection when to my knowledge cancer susceptibility is not genetically passed, fe i wouldn't hang on to the fact my grandparents smoked and didn't develop cancer as a sign i wouldn't
@abyssstrider2547
@abyssstrider2547 10 күн бұрын
@@xavier4519 Uhhhhh, smoking is quite different when compared to radiation.
@Shadowbaneado
@Shadowbaneado 9 күн бұрын
​@@abyssstrider2547 Actually, cigarettes contain Polonium and other radioactive isotopes 🤓
@blender_wiki
@blender_wiki Ай бұрын
Conclusions : humans are more dangerous than any nuclear fallout
@someoneelse5505
@someoneelse5505 Ай бұрын
>we are the real monsters :O
@durratulaishah3703
@durratulaishah3703 Ай бұрын
Not surprised honestly
@sheilaolfieway1885
@sheilaolfieway1885 Ай бұрын
shows that we need to be more conservative when we hunt non-food animals..
@CountCocofang
@CountCocofang Ай бұрын
There is a reason humanity is considered the sixth mass extinction.
@Bahador.B
@Bahador.B Ай бұрын
Nuclear fallout comes from humanity, so your ideology is void.
@mitsunoseikaku2597
@mitsunoseikaku2597 Ай бұрын
We often underestimate the resiliency of life, I mean we got organisms literally living besides active volcanoes and thrive even more after an eruption (its a type of snail) and then there's the tardegrade that can suvive the vacum of space with radiation and all
@YarPirates-vy7iv
@YarPirates-vy7iv Ай бұрын
Is that the snail with an iron shell? It's metal af.
@NeuroRadX
@NeuroRadX Ай бұрын
Yeah, we humans just lack the insight that we are first, a part of nature, and second, a comparatively fragile one at that. Sure, animal and plant species die out all the time, due to human activities or other factors, but only when we ourselves feel the impact of well... nuclear bombs and accidents, do we start to investigate and question it. If, hopefully, we do no Fallout ourselves in a few decades, climate change will be hard enough on humanity as a whole. Humans do not have the capability to quickly evolve for survival in different conditions over just a few generations. Nature will be here in a few 10000 years, humans very likely won't...
@SavageDragon999
@SavageDragon999 Ай бұрын
A nuclear apocalypses might not be the end of humanity as depicted in movies tbh. Yes it might wipe out 95% of all humans, but those that actually survive by natural selection will have a highly resiliency towards radiation and cancer and will pass that on to their offsprings. Within 500 years, which, frankly, is a blink of an eye in the grand scheme of things, humanity will emerge even more resilient than before.
@honor9lite1337
@honor9lite1337 Ай бұрын
​Comparing it with an AI apocalypse, then humanity would be extinct. @@SavageDragon999
@thenaiam
@thenaiam Ай бұрын
Life..uh.. You know the rest.
@ossiantansley6583
@ossiantansley6583 Ай бұрын
Please dont forget the human cost of the Marshall island nuclear tests. Of the Islanders who were displaced, and those affected by the fallout. Levels of cancer and birth defects were extremely elevated for generations. Rare earth just made a very good video series about these people, highly recommend.
@officialdcshepard
@officialdcshepard 12 күн бұрын
This is also on Nebula! I am a LIFETIME member because there’s just such a breadth of creators that are so knowledgeable. And to be honest they have contributed to my single favorite best nonfiction library in streaming. Examples include Jet Lag The Game, LegalEagle, RealTimeHistory, Tale Foundry, Wendover…
@DonnaChamberson
@DonnaChamberson 3 күн бұрын
Gross, humans are gay.
@notfunny3397
@notfunny3397 14 күн бұрын
A little sad they didn't talk much about the human communities affected by the US nuclear tests. There used to be indigenous people living bear bikini atoll, who had their Islands absolutely covered in radioactive dust. Rare Earth has a series on them.
@vamp97
@vamp97 9 күн бұрын
The US has historically never cared about indigenous populations :(
@deno9607
@deno9607 8 күн бұрын
Agreed but the subject is more about animals and plants biological reactions to the bombs than a geographical social education.
@peachtree2579
@peachtree2579 6 күн бұрын
​@@deno9607 considering the fact that humans are animals and play an active role in the ecosystem, I would say its not irrelevant to the core focus of the video.
@user-ti8xn2is9i
@user-ti8xn2is9i 4 күн бұрын
appreciate it
@aliendribble023
@aliendribble023 Ай бұрын
What an amazing, well written, and non-dramatized analysis on the subject. Too many channels would try to look for the most shocking evidence, or the most sensationalist perspective on this discussion, but I really enjoyed how you pointed out the many pros, along with cons that come with such a contentious topic.
@HissoriRenda
@HissoriRenda Ай бұрын
Real science baby!
@Poolooloo7
@Poolooloo7 25 күн бұрын
This whole channel has that, it’s great.
@jamesdietz29
@jamesdietz29 Ай бұрын
This makes me curious about the insect life in and around these radiation exclusion zones.
@Tribrid-zv3nq
@Tribrid-zv3nq Ай бұрын
Some organisms would adapt to the radiation in the atmosphere. Just not us
@jamesdietz29
@jamesdietz29 Ай бұрын
@@Tribrid-zv3nq Of course, but I'd like to actually see some of these "adaptations" and their impact on the insect's ability to thrive and on the environment it's self. Maybe I'll Google it and see what turns up.
@coinisinorbit
@coinisinorbit Ай бұрын
funnily enough most of the insects we encounter in fallout new vegas are man made, from the cazadors to the night stalkers all are made from gene splicing their mutated genomes
@yanickpunter324
@yanickpunter324 20 күн бұрын
Google for bugs in Chernobyl, you'll see. They are disfigured.
@V77710
@V77710 18 күн бұрын
​@@Tribrid-zv3nqperhaps humans are not so adept at rapid evolution..or its karma since we are the ones who caused the mess
@JinKee
@JinKee 12 күн бұрын
i am sick of them putting radiation into the water that turns the friggin frogs black
@AidanDaGreat
@AidanDaGreat 9 күн бұрын
Do you understand that?
@MilesPlayzTheOG
@MilesPlayzTheOG 7 күн бұрын
Dude your racist
@eggyx2734
@eggyx2734 7 күн бұрын
dang it...i read that in uncle jones voice kek
@brie3679
@brie3679 6 күн бұрын
Black and gay. 😂
@AlexWalford-jm3mg
@AlexWalford-jm3mg 4 күн бұрын
I agree, I want green frogs
@jakepockets4977
@jakepockets4977 Ай бұрын
Lmfao, haven't gotten through the rest of the video... Just gotta point out a potentially accidental pun. "After the dust settles" was such an apt thing to say when considering the Elephant's Foot dust is some of the most dangerous radioactive whoopsiedoodles we've ever created as human beings. Breathe a couple of those dust particles in and you're gonna have a bad time.
@Flt.Hawkeye
@Flt.Hawkeye Ай бұрын
Breathe in enoght and your Bad time ends faster
@thegunslinger1363
@thegunslinger1363 Ай бұрын
Look up Stanislav Petrov and Vasily Arkhipov. Those men saved humanity.
@yamahamotocrosskid
@yamahamotocrosskid Ай бұрын
Just did, holy crap I wonder how many other times the world has come so close to an end
@mattheide2775
@mattheide2775 Ай бұрын
I had forgotten these brave men. Thank you.
@deletdis6173
@deletdis6173 10 күн бұрын
​@yamahamotocrosskid The Cuban Missile Crisis A meteor almost hit Earth in the 1800s and it was caught on camera. Among other events.
@markedis5902
@markedis5902 Ай бұрын
The world will recover, humans not so much. Nature finds a way.
@LayllasLocker
@LayllasLocker Ай бұрын
Humans are also part of the nature. They would recover as well.
@leonfrancis3418
@leonfrancis3418 11 күн бұрын
​@@LayllasLockerYou're missing the point. Our existence is simply our existence. It doesn't make the world go round. If we all dropped děad tomorrow, life would go on, and likely be better in the planet for it.
@deletdis6173
@deletdis6173 10 күн бұрын
Human bad
@leonfrancis3418
@leonfrancis3418 10 күн бұрын
@@deletdis6173 They can be. It's a choice.
@JVlk-tw6fs
@JVlk-tw6fs 9 күн бұрын
@@LayllasLocker Nope. Look at 6 mass extinctions. Up to 96% of species die out to create a new "explosion", and repeat the cycle. Also, the 1st mass extinction happened because some organisms polluted everything around. The've killed themselves
@indigofenix00
@indigofenix00 9 күн бұрын
In the case of the wolves, maybe they had a similar instance of rapid selection as the frogs, where only the wolves with the most cancer-resistant genes survived in the early years. Now the radiation levels are lower, but they still retain the genes inherited from those survivors, making them more resistant to cancer than normal wolves.
@cooltubes547
@cooltubes547 Ай бұрын
“So let us now take our vengeance on this murderous ocean” -people who detonated castle bravo probably
@EmuQuest
@EmuQuest 13 күн бұрын
I have become death destroyer of aquatic life
@zachb9026
@zachb9026 14 күн бұрын
Correction at 15:30 - 100 mGy is the absolute minimum level at which we can see cancer caused by radiation in humans. And even at that level, it increase your risk of cancer by about 1 in 1000 over the course of your life. So instead of having a 40% chance of cancer induction during your life, you'll have a 40.1% chance of cancer induction. So the statement that "Its generally established that exposure of over 100 mGy of radiation in human will cause cancer" is misleading at best. It generally takes a lot more radiation than that to cause cancer on average.
@BPBomber
@BPBomber Ай бұрын
Wolves naturally selecting for immunity to radiation mutations. Cool.
@ob_dowboosh
@ob_dowboosh 12 күн бұрын
1:13 is a war remnant because it says "CAUTION MINES" in Ukrainian. 🇷🇺 soldiers were in the Chornobyl Zone. Some of them were told to dig in the "Red forest" area.
@Dellvmnyam
@Dellvmnyam Ай бұрын
1:12 that sign says "Caution, mines" and has nothing to do with the radioactive pollution but rather with ongoing russian invasion in Ukraine
@MrKZee
@MrKZee Ай бұрын
+1 also, I couldn't find a sign with text - only symbol, But for anyone who is interested, it should say "Обережно радіоактивність"
@MrKZee
@MrKZee Ай бұрын
And a side fact that Chernobyl actually was a military zone before the war so in theory there could have been some mines, and the modern sign for mines is actually red square, because it's often installed in "green" places, and the black sign will not be visible. So in theory it could be in Chernobyl, also there are a lot of shots from Chernobyl, So my theory is someone made this photo in Chernobyl and the person who picked it doesn't know Ukrainian language to understand that it's unrelated.
@MrKZee
@MrKZee Ай бұрын
Checked it again.. I think you are 100% right: the sign is made by using spray paint and stencil - not a soviet era thing and was done because supplying mines sign is not very important. In my defence, before the invasion i've seen a lot of red signs "HALT! MINES!".
@slawasaporogez6581
@slawasaporogez6581 10 күн бұрын
​@@MrKZee You are correct. We did warning signs about radiation, but in current circumstances you will be more likely to find warning signs about mines from Chornobyl. It was an occupied area in 2022 after all.
@patrickblanchette4337
@patrickblanchette4337 Ай бұрын
8:49 This bit sums up Moira’s observations in Fallout 3 perfectly!😊
@manifoldcypher760
@manifoldcypher760 Ай бұрын
Good thing she had the lone wanderer to use as a Guinea pig. Sorry, I meant study.
@drakob
@drakob Ай бұрын
I'm actually marshallese this just hit me in the feels
@vamp97
@vamp97 9 күн бұрын
I’m not American yet I still feel compelled to apologise for what they did to your ancestors. It’s awful.
@kingdrew8888
@kingdrew8888 Ай бұрын
I believe another thing to consider is the general lifespan of whatever creature is being studied. Some cancers take a while to propagate, and to show their true colors
@Randomlyme
@Randomlyme Ай бұрын
life always finds a way
@joesaiditstrue
@joesaiditstrue Ай бұрын
it's like you know exactly what content I wanna watch
@Strype13
@Strype13 Ай бұрын
[1:53] There's an extremely tiny bug crawling around in very close proximity to that frog's eyeball and I hate everything about it.
@RobertHenderson.poopiebear
@RobertHenderson.poopiebear Ай бұрын
So glad you followed your creative fire and, created nebula! I'm DEFINITELY going to subscribe! I love your work and wish you nothing but continued success.
@alexandrdanko2619
@alexandrdanko2619 Ай бұрын
Chornobyl Red Forest is not around exploded plant, it’s just small line (stripe) on north-west from plant, where wind brought huge part of radioactive particles
@1st1anarkissed
@1st1anarkissed 13 күн бұрын
"Aggressively selecting for" can also be understood as "all the other variants died of cancer."
@MrRaposaum
@MrRaposaum 22 күн бұрын
I got a question. Does radioactivity poisoning, assuming it doesn't kill or debilitate the animal too much, affect their perceived behavior in a critical way? Such as... would those animals be more likely to be aggressive under these effects? For example, we know that some mammal predators, such as wolves or bears, would only attack humans (unprovoked) in specific situations. Would the effects of radioactive poisoning on their brain affect that?
@gamingwizard1609
@gamingwizard1609 Ай бұрын
Nuclear fallouts pretty scary huh
@itzhexen0
@itzhexen0 Ай бұрын
Not really.
@villager736
@villager736 Ай бұрын
@@itzhexen0 I mean if it's bad enough, then yeah..
@mike_nolan
@mike_nolan Ай бұрын
Eh...
@RobertHenderson.poopiebear
@RobertHenderson.poopiebear Ай бұрын
Definitely F**KING SCARY! What's REALLY SCARY though is that for four years DONALD GUMP had control and, could have ordered a test and/or an attack.... At almost ANY time! Unbelievable!
@manifoldcypher760
@manifoldcypher760 Ай бұрын
Ask the people exposed to fallout.
@theprecipiceofreason
@theprecipiceofreason 12 күн бұрын
I'm glad that animals can somewhat withstand our contaminants. I'm sad that the conclusion appears that we are destined to destroy ourselves, in particular.
@ruththinkingoutside.707
@ruththinkingoutside.707 23 күн бұрын
Okay.. @19:31 you sold me on the paleo archeology.. It’s my FAVORITE history phase to binge in any way.. So.. Now I’ll have to see about nebula.. even though I still don’t have a functioning television or computer 😂..
@gibdopaminepls
@gibdopaminepls Ай бұрын
Just a heads up Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not, in fact, the only bombs dropped on humans. (I'm on 4:30 so if you mention this in the video later, my bad) While unintentional, the Castle Bravo bomb did affect a lot of pacific islanders, due to it being bigger than expected, which were then effectively quarantined and treated as lab rats by the US to study radiation. One scientist remarked "They're more like us than the mice" when asked about it, which paints the picture of how they saw these pacific islanders. If you're interested, a few days back Evan from Rare Earth made a great video of the people of Rongelap Atoll, which were the most affected: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eIfPoXdup5yaotE
@AlexCFaulkner
@AlexCFaulkner Ай бұрын
How is the frog example quick evolution? Wouldn't that just be rapid natural selection?
@John_Smith_86
@John_Smith_86 Ай бұрын
I mean, it is true, isn't it? The islanders are more similar to Americans than mice are
@elpito9326
@elpito9326 Ай бұрын
​@@John_Smith_86 at the time, they were part of the US (or US-controlled territory). So, politically, they were Americans
@John_Smith_86
@John_Smith_86 Ай бұрын
@@elpito9326 Right. Politically
@elpito9326
@elpito9326 Ай бұрын
@@John_Smith_86 what are you trying to say?
@chrixmarx
@chrixmarx Ай бұрын
the test on bikini atoll got humans too. they all die because of nuclear fallout. lets not forget then.
@gekkiebekkie1000
@gekkiebekkie1000 Ай бұрын
This was very interesting to other videos previously! I really would like to see more videos on the effect of human behavriour and how nature deal with it. Very good video and so different from the rest so far.
@user-AADZ
@user-AADZ 12 күн бұрын
[Intro: SpongeBob] You call it Bikini Atoll We call it Bikini Bottom The post World War nuclear testing It changed all of our atoms Mutated marine wildlife I was cursed to walk and talk And now I'm making my way through town To line some bodies in chalk 🗣️🔥🔥🔥
@joystickgames-fb6zh
@joystickgames-fb6zh 8 күн бұрын
16:19 what might`ve happened was that the constant exposure to radiation made a selective pressure, and selected out the wolves that had more effective protective measures against tumor growth, which would allow them to live a little longer in highly irradiated areas. And those genes that protected against tumor growth were passed on.
@LuckyWolfUnleashed
@LuckyWolfUnleashed 10 күн бұрын
8:34 Subnautica beat brought me back, and that huge coral.
@MrApplebite100
@MrApplebite100 25 күн бұрын
Love your channel ❤
@EmilyJelassi
@EmilyJelassi Ай бұрын
Fascinating video!! 😮😊❤ I completely agree.. the streaming giants are incredibly frustrating and annoying! I love your videos. I truly wish I could afford to support you on Nebula... but I always watch your videos here on KZbin 😊❤
@LesEllen
@LesEllen Ай бұрын
The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen, nor touched... but are felt in the heart.
@b12-
@b12- 12 күн бұрын
you just got one new sub
@rickshawwheelchair
@rickshawwheelchair 16 күн бұрын
I have Nebula again. Sad that your co-workers never get any air time until now for 2 seconds😅 Anyway, keep up the good work and I've watched all your Nebula videos, can't wait for more! I studied geology at the University of Kansas but didn't graduate, though it gives me a strong background. I like how you only spend one minute with the basics i already know and then the last 95% is new fun facts i never heard of!
@kortjurgensmeyer5120
@kortjurgensmeyer5120 Ай бұрын
15:08 that wolf in the back looks a little special
@whiskeycan529
@whiskeycan529 18 күн бұрын
Moon moon!
@paddor
@paddor Ай бұрын
Great timing.
@AryanKumar-ng7py
@AryanKumar-ng7py Ай бұрын
I love your voice and content. ❤
@FutureAIDev2015
@FutureAIDev2015 Ай бұрын
3:51 that number is off by three orders of magnitude by the way
@reputation_ruiner_the_ragebait
@reputation_ruiner_the_ragebait 8 күн бұрын
The frogs lost their rights 💀💀💀
@KeepsTheDoctorsAway
@KeepsTheDoctorsAway 9 күн бұрын
The frog getting the pass
@RenoReborn
@RenoReborn Ай бұрын
The fallout from nuclear bombs is relatively short lived and disperses pretty quickly, life would recover insanely quickly like nothing happened within a few decades. Nuclear fallout from reactor meltdowns however, that's a much different story.
@4124V4TA-SNPCA-x
@4124V4TA-SNPCA-x 20 күн бұрын
Carpet bombing being not literal but figurative as carpet bombing a whole country by destroying all major cities and military installations.
@apexqc04
@apexqc04 Ай бұрын
For the coral reefs could it be that some forms of coral arrive and settle first while others still need time to arrive and recover, like the way flesh flies arrive at a cadaver in a specific sequence, and it's just that we are observing these reefs part way through the process?
@ray4237
@ray4237 Ай бұрын
I love these videos
@danag2841
@danag2841 4 сағат бұрын
Growing mutated, coconut palm trees has to be the dumbest decision. Do they not know how coconuts spread throughout the world?.
@gildedbear5355
@gildedbear5355 Ай бұрын
Not too lessen the impact, or danger, of fallout but just because I've been playing Fallout and because I use levity to deal with stress: Crawl out through the fallout baby!
@AlvaCoffey
@AlvaCoffey Ай бұрын
How wonderful that we have met with a paradox. Now we have some hope of making progress.
@donjoey22
@donjoey22 Ай бұрын
great video
@inumber6
@inumber6 Ай бұрын
What app or software it's used to create animations like that at 9:49 ?
@dannydaugherty527
@dannydaugherty527 7 күн бұрын
this reminds me of my grandfather, he worked in a mobile home plant that used asbestos for insulation, his job was to install it in the units, and he worked there for years doing the same job, and when he died, he died of a bad heart other than that he was perfectly healthy, we have been taught asbestos is so bad, and my whole family has been around it with no issues, so it always raises questions in my mind, is it really that bad or is it something else, I don't know the answer but I do know we have never been diagnosed with anything from asbestos
@Champdrad
@Champdrad 6 күн бұрын
Just one small correction, coconut crabs do not exclusively eat coconuts. They will eat just about anything including other animals. They often are found eating birds. There is also a video out there of them polishing off an entire pig carcass in less than a week!
@phdtobe
@phdtobe 3 күн бұрын
Uhhh… The Castle Bravo test was conducted with a “device” that was never intended to be dropped from a plane. It was simply detonated in the building it was constructed in. On the ground. NOT in the air.
@m1racul0us1yflare14
@m1racul0us1yflare14 Ай бұрын
One of the most if not the highest in ranking of human's *dangerous/nature threatening* creations 😥
@abyssaljam441
@abyssaljam441 Ай бұрын
People are going to be really confused when finding this in 2080...
@AyoBodee
@AyoBodee 14 күн бұрын
Stg😂
@flyingark173
@flyingark173 18 күн бұрын
Have you ever done a video about cat eyes? I noticed that they seem to have a less responsive pupil and uses vertical "lids" to restrict the light, which makes sense. However, I've noticed that when my 8 month old kitten is in my brightly lit bedroom, he will stare are me with little veritcal slits, but if I entice him to attack my hand playfully, it seems that as soon as he decides to attack these lids open up and his eyes are almost completely black with just a sliver of green around them. I wonder why, and does a cats vision change from normal mode to hunt mode? What is the biology behind that?
@critiqueofthegothgf
@critiqueofthegothgf 8 күн бұрын
this is the best episode on this channel. fucking incredibly informative
@CATSTUDlOZ
@CATSTUDlOZ 3 күн бұрын
2:48 thats where SpongeBob takes place, no wonder they can act like humans and stuff.
@artawhirler
@artawhirler Ай бұрын
Excellent video as always! Thanks!
@emom358
@emom358 Ай бұрын
Kyle Hill has an excellent video series about Chernobyl and radiation.
@aldenconsolver3428
@aldenconsolver3428 Ай бұрын
At 16:15 you discuss a gene appearing in a larger number in the wolf population. Is this the P53 tumor suppressor protein gene? Human beings carry one of these genes (elephants carry 20) and its failure is usually associated with tumors. Where could I look into this?
@E_blanknamehere
@E_blanknamehere 6 күн бұрын
The chernobyl disaster whipped out the green frogs. That makes sense. the black frogs aren't black from a mutation, They are just *S.T.A.L.K.E.R's* chilling out in the exclusion zone
@WilhelmDrake
@WilhelmDrake 3 күн бұрын
@16:00 re: wolves I would suspect that the wolves are being selected for resilience to cancer.
@nghiado9895
@nghiado9895 2 күн бұрын
Well done and well said at 17:25, "... garbage that network TV fed us for decades".
@SciMinute
@SciMinute Ай бұрын
Nuclear fallout is pretty scary indeed..! 😢
@Dust2709
@Dust2709 5 күн бұрын
6:00 Water is really good at blocking radiation, so if the water or ground under the corals isn't conterminated and the corals are deep enough, nothing really happends
@pryncecharming2133
@pryncecharming2133 Ай бұрын
Radiation proof wolves. So cool.
@AcidicBanana_YT
@AcidicBanana_YT 10 күн бұрын
that was the smoothest sponsor script ive ever heard of 😭
@TheFerdi265
@TheFerdi265 12 күн бұрын
The fact about the rapid evolution of the frogs around Chernobyl is really interesting!
@Cornish_Co
@Cornish_Co Ай бұрын
3:39 "Surface seawater temperatures reached 55,000°C." How is this possible?
@raybod1775
@raybod1775 Ай бұрын
Blast wave pressure
@Cornish_Co
@Cornish_Co Ай бұрын
@@raybod1775 Makes sense. Thanks
@RichardWilliams2015
@RichardWilliams2015 Ай бұрын
At the time scientists had no idea about the amplification effect of lithium-oxide metals used in the CASTLE BRAVO shots casing. It basically under goes a process where itself turns into fissile material that adds to the yield by releasing what I like to call an "assload of nuetrons". Modern nuclear weapons are said to have blast temperatures that momentarily rival the core of the sun in temperature.
@Flt.Hawkeye
@Flt.Hawkeye Ай бұрын
​@RichardWilliams2015 they get much hotter a thing many people seem to overestimate is our sun temperature. The Fusion in the sun happens due to the sheer pressure of gravity and a smaller amount of heat. Sure the sun is hot. But we can easily Beat this temperature by Factors of 10.
@RichardWilliams2015
@RichardWilliams2015 Ай бұрын
@@Flt.Hawkeye exactly! The hottest temperatures so far have been generated by CERN smacking sub atomic particles together like in the trillions of billions degrees C
@calebbrown6735
@calebbrown6735 12 күн бұрын
The black sturgeon found on deadliest catch was crazy.
@MagStone-cf9qm
@MagStone-cf9qm Ай бұрын
Fear grows in darkness; if you think theres a bogeyman around, turn on the light.
@erikadlloyd5586
@erikadlloyd5586 Ай бұрын
Those wolf pups are so adorable 🥰
@kenyarborough812
@kenyarborough812 10 күн бұрын
In the introduction, you show a radiation sign in front of some antennas. That's actually not radioactive. It's the Duga array, a radar. The sign is warning the radio wave (not radiation) is dangerous.
@Morbidt123
@Morbidt123 7 күн бұрын
Hey! :D What's the music piece that starts playing at 13:40 ? I really like it:)
@theman8209
@theman8209 6 күн бұрын
the chemicals in the water are turning the frogs black
@deadbum
@deadbum 14 күн бұрын
THE POND HAS FALLEN
@jessedawg4693
@jessedawg4693 Ай бұрын
You are doing fallout love it!!!
@jon782
@jon782 8 күн бұрын
castle bravo was not launched, nor dropped, it was detonated on the beach because it was the size of a dump truck. I believe it in part consisted of a tank of a isotope of lithium I think it was lithium 7.
@rionthemagnificent2971
@rionthemagnificent2971 7 күн бұрын
The problem with the Bikini atoll was the issue of evacuating the natives. They were supposed to be evacuated but the military industrial complex wanted more education on how the human body would react to radiation exposure to use against the "Commie menace" of the cold war.
@MaxDiscere
@MaxDiscere Ай бұрын
Your reference R14 doesn't point to a wolf related study, but something from Sudan. Please correct that I wanna read into it
@MrKZee
@MrKZee Ай бұрын
Fun fact: 1:17 - it's from 🇺🇦Chernobyl and says "let the atom be the worker, not the soldier" "
@__-zm8yt
@__-zm8yt 9 күн бұрын
you have to keep in mind that many forms of radiation can't travel far in water
@JuliusBessemer
@JuliusBessemer Ай бұрын
I believe that a simple and unassuming manner of life is best for everyone, best both for the body and the mind.
@Delirium132231
@Delirium132231 16 күн бұрын
1:13 the sign says: "Caution. Mines".
@vamp97
@vamp97 9 күн бұрын
At first I thought I’d misclicked onto one of the fallout lore videos I regularly watch 😅
@Nawenn
@Nawenn 16 күн бұрын
Actually, castle Bravo was not the first fusion warhead tested, that title would go to Ivy Mike.
@alexanderwim3139
@alexanderwim3139 15 күн бұрын
Interesting video, thank you for such cool content. By the way, the correct spelling of the city is "Chornobyl", not "Chernobyl", because it's the Ukrainian city "Чорнобиль".
@brians9182
@brians9182 26 күн бұрын
There's a nuclear reactor near-by my home town, maybe an hours drive. There's rumors of crickets that bite and other things.
@haileyunicorn6372
@haileyunicorn6372 Күн бұрын
Not them naming 2 of them little boy and fat man😂
@blindedbliss
@blindedbliss Ай бұрын
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